$100 Laptop Gets Redesigned

$100 Laptop Gets Redesigned

Hundred-dollar laptop, revisited: The next-generation version of the One Laptop per Child machine will dispense with keypads. It can be folded flat to make one larger screen or it can be held on its side and used as an electronic book.

Tossing aside its iconic
green-and-white laptop with its distinctive antennas, One Laptop per Child (OLPC) is
pursuing a smaller 2.0 version, scheduled for release in 2010, in which dual touch
screens will replace the keypad. The new version will have lower power
consumption and a $75 price–a figure that OLPC claims is achievable despite the
fact that the current model, the XO, sells for nearly double the sum mentioned
in its “$100 laptop” moniker.

With its hinged
dual display, the new version could be used as a book, as a laptop with a
touch-screen keypad, or as one continuous display when folded flat. “The
display is going to get better and better, and it’s key to the next
generation,” Nicholas Negroponte, founder of OLPC, said yesterday at a
launch event at the MIT Media Lab.

The redesign is OLPC’s
latest effort to revitalize global adoption of its machines. Last week, OLPC announced
that the current version will soon have the option of running on Microsoft Windows;
previously, the machines only ran on the GNU/Linux operating system, plus a
custom interface called Sugar that emphasizes collaboration among children.
With the addition of Windows, OLPC hopes to boost sales to countries, such as
Egypt, that already use Windows software in schools.

Pixel Qi, the display-technology
startup founded by former OLPC chief technology officer Mary Lou Jepsen,
will collaborate in the development of the new computer. Its smaller size will
make the laptops easier for children to carry than the previous, larger
version, Negroponte said yesterday. And despite the smaller size, the display
will be larger–when both screens are used–than the one on the current
version. Because the machine will have no keypad, there will be fewer
mechanical parts to break. And whereas the current XO consumes only two to four
watts–one-tenth of the amount consumed by a conventional laptop–the
next-generation version will use as little as one watt.

But until the new machine comes
online, the existing XO will continue to be sold. Only about 600,000 hard
orders have come in–a far cry from the 100 million that, two years ago,
Negroponte said he was hoping to obtain by 2008. And last week’s announcement
that the XO will have the option of using Windows or the existing Linux-based
operating system has led to some debate among education officials. Yesterday,
Oscar Becerra, a Peruvian education ministry official who directs the OLPC deployment under
way there, says that he sees little value in adding Windows for computers in
primary schools.